What science is saying about the Celts
Transcription
What science is saying about the Celts
WHAT SCIENCE IS SAYING ABOU'r CELTS ABOUT THE CELTS Pocock. Pocock has recently reviewed, in the Times Liter~ry Supplement, Malcolm Crick IS 's Exploratiors in Language and Meaning. Pocock makes much of the commitment to a full realisation of humanity that the semantic enterprise, in his eyes, represents. Many of us arefamiliar~ are'fruniliar~ by now, now 3 with Crick's contrast of the reductive banalities of much conventional soctal,science, to their discredit, with the inexhaustible joys to be fO'l.U'ld fO'l.m.d in pondering the works of a creative being. The particularly baneful effect of a narrovrly conceived scientific method is much emphasised. That this is a good story with Solid and enduring founda foundations is evidenced by the fact that we have not tired of either telling tellj.ng it or listening to it in Oxford over'the last few years. The appeal that this story has for us should not lead us to suppose that it is particularly novel. It is, I think, in some respects, quite old. What I would like to do here he~e is to give some thoughts on the symbolism of the; shift from functitm function to meaning, and some indication of the way in whi~h whi~h science in particular, partiCUlar, and formal systems in general, have been assessed as inimical to a full realisation of humanity, as representing a diminution, ..or or dehumanisa.tion, dehumanisation, of man •. These reflections arose during an attempt to understand the rationale behind the ascription of certain qualities to the Celtic character and. anel to Celtic social life. I will begin, therefore, by giving some background to the construction of the which really begins in Celtic character in European literature, a story 1vhich Scotland in the 1760s. In the first half of the eighteenth century neither the English, nor, more significantly, the Scottish establishment, paid much attention to the. Gaelic speaking Highlanders, 'e'Xcept as a source of insurrection. insur:rection. the ,Gaelic Highlanders,eZcept The new middle class of Edinburgh was too bllSY bilSY reaping the commercial benefits of the Union to interest itself in a~ people who were a poli politica:J.. tica:L embarrassment and an economic. irrelevance. Societies like the S.P.C~K. S.P.C~K. considered it their duty in their Highland activities to spread the English language and to assist in dravring drawing the Highlands fully into the political and economic orbit of Edinhl.lrgh. Edinburgh. Any suggestion that the Gaelic language was the vehicle· of expression of a literature, or that the Highland character or way of life had any particular virtue, would have been treated as a here~T against the economic orthodoxy of I improvement'. improvement I . This situation wa.s transformed, at a literary level, in the 1760s by the publication by James MacPherson of a series of epic poems which became popularly known as MacPherson's Ossie~. Ossie~. These were, MacPherson claimed, translations from ancient manuscripts of Gaelic poems originally composed by Ossian, the hero barel bard of the ancient Caledonian kingdom of Morven, in the third century A.D. These Thesepoems poems gene:rated generated immediate and widespread interest and became involved in a controversy about their authenticity which rumbled on for the next hundred years. Although largely forgotten now no,,! outside the world of literary studies or the Highlands, it would be difficult to overesti overestimate their celebrity in the late eighteenth century. The Ossianic poems were translated into almost every European language, Napoleon kept an Italian translation by his bedside during his campaigns, David Hume advised as to the best means of establishing their authen authenticity, and Doctor Johnson inveighed against them. The progress of the controversy over authenticity, which bec~Ille becan~ very acrimonious, need not concern us here. It is now generally accepted that MacPherson drew some inspiration for his Ossian from the oral tradition in Gaelic speaking areas. It is also held with some confidence, however, that no Gaelic manuscript or text of any kind ever existed which was a simple - 85 original for any of MacPherson's 'translations', and that the unique characteristics of the Ossianic verse can be ascribed largely to MacPherson. Authentic or not, the Ossianicpoems obviously spoke with a welcome and recognisable voice~ voice~ They are now held to bea vital text for an understanding of the beginnings of the romantic J.:·omantic movement in European literature. In assisting at the birth of ~he Romantic movement the Ossianicpoems were defined in opposition to the theOssianicpoems English language Classical tradition of the seventeenth and early eighteenth century,and centurY,and ·owed their form far more to a reaction against this tradition than they did to the Gaelic verse tradition on which they were ostensibly based. The reaction against the conventions of style and subject of Classical verse took the form in Ossian and in later Romantic verse of an assumed affinity with nature, simple and unaffected, a praise of the spontaneous rule of the emotions ihhuman conduct, and, later, a political radicalism. That these matters were taken not just as metaphorical criticisms of a state of society but as rules for conduct we can see in, in~ for example, the personal chao~ chaoE! which Shelley created around himself in his attempts to live a full aqd spontaneous life. ' It is a commonplace of criticism attempting to understand Romantic verse that it gained much of its character as a reaction not ju~t to Classical verse but to a prevailing rationalism, a century of social conformity, and a utilitarian economic order. MacPherson's decision to locate his muse in the Highlands among a race known for their fond fondness for political independence and lost causes, with all the vague associations of the simple, unaffected, and spontaneous that barbarity has had for civilised ciVilised society since antiquity, is both creation and confirmation of this view. It is worth noting that it was larg'ely through the poems of Ossian that an interest in things Celtic was awakened in the world of academic discourse. Thus at its origin Celtic studies was concerned not with an 'authentic' Celtic voice but with a vision of a Celtic 'other' that it had conjured up in response to its image of itself. This disjunction is effeCtively maintained in the uneasy relationship that exists at the present between, to choose an obvious example, the native Gaelic speaker and those societies that exist to protect his·language and further his· interests. That the inauthenticity in the eighteenth century was profound we Can readily appreciate when we observe that this period saw the finest flowering of native Gaelic verse, of which MacPherson and those involved in the Ossianic controversy were largely ignorant. At the time that Ossianic verse was informing the Romantic EngliShlanguage tradition as a supposed import from the Gaelic, Gaelic poets of note like Alexander MacDonald, Duncan Ban, and Rob Donn, ,.,ere were writing verse that seems, in subject and sentiment, to have little about it that could be labeliedRomantic. labelled Romantic. The Ossianic controversy was not, in any simple way, about Gaelic literature. Rather, it was a dialogue between a dominant eighteenth century world view and its own limitations. The discovery of MacPherson's deceptions did not cause his verse to lose its appeal, and did not lead to any serious attempt to under understand and pr~serve pr~serve the Gaelic traditional verse that Doctor Johnson had scornfully ca.lled 'wandering ballads'. That such an epithet does not now sound scornful is some measure of the distance we have travelled. In the early nineteenth century the 'Celt' became involved in dis discussions of the philological history of Europe which provided an idiom in which any subject SUbject could be discussed, reaching surprising heights of fancy. The most influential of these ethnologies concerning the Celts were supplied, in the ~iddle ~iddle of the century, not by specialist eltic scholars, but by two prominent literati, Ernest Renan and Matthew Arnold, the latter bringing the ideas of Renan to an Oxford audience. - 86 .. .. Renan Henan published pUblished a series of articles in La Revue des Deux Mondes in 1854 called 'La Poesie des Races Celtiques' in which he contrasted the populations of' Brittany. Wa.les ,and ori ty .and the Highlands with the maj ority populationsofFrance populations of France and Britain. 111bat ~~at follows are a few typical quotes, quotes) the first describing the entry into Brittany (my translations): In the place of Norman vulgarity, vulgarity) in the place of a fat and prosperous people, content to live, live) full of its own' interests, interests) egoistical as are all those who make a habit of enjoying life, we find, a timid, a reserved) reserved, withdrawn v7ithdrawn race, ,clumsy but feeling deeply and having clumsy in appearance, appearance,but an adorable delicacy in their religious instincts (19 1q ': 252). 'l'he Celtic race has all the faults and all the qualities.. qualities, of the solitary man; at once proud and timid, strong in sentiment and weak in action ... It is par excellence a domestic race, made for the family and the joys of the " fireside (1947 : 255). If we be permitted to asign a sex to nations as well as to individuals, we can say without hesitation that the 'Celtic race, especially its Cymric or Breton branch, is essentially feminine (1947 : 258). Perhaps the deepest instinct of the Celtic peoples is the desire to penetrate the unknown (1947 : 258). 258), Renan was born and brought up in Brittany and retained a great fondness for his birthplace to which he retired retired in old age. Much of his +ife was devoted to a consideration'of consideration' of the relationship between religion and science in a modern and rational world. He held a mystical view of the destiny of races, races) considering that the Celtic race would have finally fulfilled itself by nurturing the imaginative spiri spiritt in the breast of those in France and Britain of other racial origin, and then passing quietly out of time and history. It will perhaps help if I were to give a clearer indication of Renan I s ideas of the relationship between science and nature, between Renan's man and vroman. woman. ~:'he ~~e following is from the preface to his Recollections of My; Youth, published in 1883: The natural sequence of this book, which is neither more nor less than the sequence in the various periods of my life, brings about a sort anec$ort of contrast between the anec dotes of Brittany and those of the Seminary, the latter being the details of a darksome struggle, full of reason-· ings and hard scholasticism" while the recollections of my earlier years are instinct with the impressions of childlike senl3itiveness, innocence~ and sensitiveness, of candour,., candour, of innocence, of affection. There is nothing surprising about this contrast. Nearly all of us are double. The more a man develops intellectually, the stronger is his attraction to the opposite pole: that is to say, the irrational, to the repose of the mind in absolute ignorance, to the woman who is merely a woman, the instinctive being who acts solely from the impulse of ObSC1ITe consciousness The superiority of modern science consists in the fact that each step forward it takes isa step further in the order of abstraction's. We make chemistry' from chemistry, algebra from algebra; the very indefatiga indefatigability with which we fathom nature removes us further from her. This is as it should be, and let no one fear 87- 87 ~ for out of this thismer'ciless to prosecute his researches researches~ merciless ' dissection comes life. But we need not be surprised at dii:dec-' ., the feverish heat which ,after these orgies of ' diedec-' the 'artless' tics, can only only be calmed by the kisses of the' artless' creature in whom nature lives and smiles. Woman restores us to communication with the eternal spririgin which God reflects himself" (1883 : xi). .' This, while we m,ight iaugh,.isnonetheless' iaugh, ,is nonetheless' familiar enough. These ideas in French Celtic studies are still flourishing.ina flourishing ,in a recent work Jean Markale, Professor of 'celtic entitled Women of of, -the'celts the'celts by JeanMarkale,Professor Sorbonne,. He' says: ., History in the Sorbonne,' " ' woman; This Until now, only poets have really understood women; is i.s probably because' woman, like poetry, is a continuous creation ~ a "cruCible in which scattered energies are :remelted down ~ and which embraces' the unique act 'that; :re solves all contradictions, abolishes time, breaks ,the chains of loneliness, and leads back to alost'unity (1975: 284). Renan 1 s Celt further until I have hai,regiven I will delay discussing Renan's given ME,tt hew Arnold's Arnold' s version of the same myth. Arnold Arnoldgave 1&:',tt gave a series' of lectures in Oxford ,as Professor, ,of Poetry in 1865" in :whi,ch he drew has,qeen justly observeo. observeq, that A,rnold.'sfirst Arnold.'sfirst heavily on Renan. It has,b.een ,~short holiday: at an hand knowledge of, things Ceitic was limited to ,~short Eisteddfod in Llandudno. This did not prevent his arousing much argument. ,T1J.e argument recapitulated with with, remarkable interest and argument.Tbe int~rest fidelity that overOssianinthe over Ossian in the previous century, and the i~t~rest il;1 ,Celtic Celtic was founded' :in Oxf~rd. was such that eventually a chair in founded:inOxf~rd. Forty years after the lectures Alfred Nutt, judging an Eisteddfod essay competition on the subject of the contribution of the various theBri tish Isles, ei,rer"y entry races to the literature of theBritish Isles ~ found that ever'y was a mere repetition of Arnold's imaginative tale. . .' . '. i he Arnold tells us how,after how, after attending an Eisteddfod meeting, he came out into the street and met ' , , • .• an acquaintance fresh from London and the parlia parlia•.• monient the spell of the Celtic mentary session. In a moment Saxori genius was forgotten, the Philistinism of our Saxon nature made itself felt; and my friend and I walked up and down by the roaring waves, talking not of ovates and triads andenglyns,but and' englyns , 'but of the sewage' and bards, end question, and the glories of our local self-government, and the mysterious perfections of the Metropolitan Board of1.,rorks (1891 : 8). ' " tangible,material inIt is clear that the world of tangible, material affairs, of in strumental activity, is opposed to creativity and'the world of ideas toCelt.Arnold as Anglo-Saxon to Celt. Arnold is 'quite ruthless in his affirmation irreof the spirituality of the Celtic race (language.; muse), and its irre world? arguing arguin'g that 'The levance for the affairs of the material world, sooner the Welsh language disappears as an instrument of the practical, political, social life of Wales, the better' (189l: (189J,.: 10); the Celtic geni us 'cannot count appreciably now, as a material" power; but ••. it genius may count for a good deal ... as a spiritual power' (1891: 13). He elaborates this in his exposition of the German geniUS, which he describes as: 88- 88 Steadiness with honesty; the danger for a national excelspirit thus composed is ,the humdrum ... The excel lence lence, of a national spirit ,thus thus composed is freedom fro~whim; ., flightinesp, perverseness; fidefroIIl,whim, patient fide to' Nature, -- in a, wo~d, wo~d, science -- leading it lity to at last, though slowly, and not by the mos4 brilliant road, Qut of the bondage of the humdrum and common, universal dead-level of into the better life. The universal plainness and homeliness, the lack of all beauty and foritr and 'feature, the slowness and distinction in for1tr clumsiness' of the language, the eternal beer,. sausage, , bad tobacco, the blank comonness commonness everywhere, and bad' pressing at last like a weight on the spirits of the ,travell~r . in Northern Ge~any, Ge~any, ,and making him impa impa,travell~r .in tient ,to, be gone, --this is the weak side; the elaboindustry" the well-doing, the patient st~ady st~ady elabo ration of things, the,idea the, idea of science governing all r.ation depart:rp.epts pfhuman _.- this is the strong depart:rp.epts, of human activity, -,side (lB9l (lB91 : ,82). To this he opposes an assessment of the Celtic genius: 'Sentiment is the word,wh,iqh marks where the Celtic races really touch and are one'. The Celtic Celtic, nature is or'gan1sation quick to feel impressions, and An or'gariisation feeling them' very strongly; alively ali vely pers'cinality pers'onali ty therefore, keenly sensitive to joy and to sorrow ',:, it maybe seen ,1,n , '.:. ,:i,n wistful regret, it may be seen in p'as'sionate penetrating melancholy; but its ,essence is to aspire ardently afterlife, af'terlife, light, emotion 9 to be expansive, adventurous, and gay and emotion, (1891 . : ,84), 84) . (1891: physiologi.sts, has a larger The German, say the physiologi,sts, volume of int,estine (and who that has ever seen a German at a table d'hote will not readily believe this?), ... '" For good and for bad,the Celtic Celtic genius is more airy and unsubstantial, goes less near the ground, than the German. The rrhe Celt is often called satissensual; but it is not so much the vulgar satis factions of sense that attract him as emotion and excitement; he is truly, as .I began by s'aying, sentiment,al ... .. , always ready to ,react react against the sentimental 85), despotism of fact (1891 : 85). If his rebellion against fact has ThhUS) lamed the Celt even in spiritual work, how much more must it poli·~ have lamed him in the world of busiriessand poli·~ tics. . The skilful skilt'ul and resolute appliance of means ends, which is needed both to make progress in to ends,which material civilisation, and also to form powerful states, is. is just ,."hat '''hat the Celt has least turn for (1891,: 88). 88) • (1891: ... " ... the sensibility of the Celtic nature, its nerner-".' s'omething feminine in them, vous .exaltation, ,exaltation, have something and theCelt the Celt is thus peculiarly disposed to feel 'the the spell spell·of of the feminine idiosyncrasy; he has an affinity to it; he is not far from its secret . Again, his sensibility gives him a peculiarly near and intimate feeling of nature and the life of nature (1891 : 91). 91), 89- 89 opposite~ Arnold remarks that 'if 'if Having constructed this edifice of opposite~ g~nius! wl1ai,; wlla1,; a great cleal of the the one sets about constituting an ideal g~nius! Celt. does one find oneself drawn' to' . Celt put into it' (1891 : 89). . . , . '" , ' " ' . .with this sort of thing one of the pleasures open to us is Faced .with simple amusement! but the problem of what to do with these writings is more interesting than any mere assumption of theoretical advance in anthropology since the bad old days of "l'acial ,'1"acial explanations. !'Teither !-Tei ther Renan nor Arnold knew much about Celtic literature! which w~s in any case' only in: the early stages of its' 'discovery'. For both ~ the most prominent examples of Celtic literature were MacPherson's Ossial1, Ossia~, and Lady Charlotte Guest's recent translations from the Welsh! published in 1838 as the MabiilogiQ[;., We have already' observed that the style domi~a.nt . of Ossian was q.etermined. in response·toan established and domi~ant .tr.adition, rather than' as a representation of anything' particul~rly particul~rly .tr.adition, Celtic. ,In discovering inOssian'theCeltthat in Ossian' the Celt that they have imagined as their alter ego Renan and Arnold are gathering the flesh of the myth . their theJmyth anticipation , this same internal confirmation, about· about- itself. This same anticipation, Remin' s appreciation of Lady ,Guest's we find in a more obvious' form in Renan' imatranslation, of which he says: ' 'In order to render the graceful ima gination of a people so eminently endowed with feminine tact! :i,.t requires the pen of a woman.' Simple !animated, without affectation affectt\.tian or vulgarity! Lady Charlotte Guest's translation is a faithfUl mirror of 19.47 : 264). Renan was quite correct in the original Welsh' (Renan 1947 attributing the tact of the Maginogion to femininity, but it was that of Lady Charlotte rather than that of th~ Celts, whose rough edges tr~slation. were much smoothed in tr~slation. J We· We are dealing in these writings with certain familiar dualitIes. dualitIes. which The congruence between this picture of the Celt and that with which of women were burdened hardly needS further exposition. The areas of Celt, the domestic sphere! religion, emotion$,lity, emotion$,li ty, competence of,' the Celt, significantly, the areas of his incompe incompe- and the minor 'arts, and more significantly! manipula- tence, those of politics and economics, and the scientific manipula class tion of the material world, are precisely those that the middle class the Victorian woman lived in and with. ' The adjectives appropriate to the still Celt, whimsical, fickle, nervous, unsteady, emotional, fanci:(,ul, fanci~ul, still belittlement. form 'a potent vocabulary for female belittlement. pine- we can' also clearly see other dualisms that so' vexed the pine more, some less less teenth century mind and, in different ways, some more! behreen concealed, continue to vex us today. The relationships behreen ~between th~ inte inte- science and religion, between science and' the arts ~between l,lect rational 'and the intuitive, betweep betweep. ~lect and the emotions, the rational;andthe creativity, between facts and ideas, between between instrumentality and creativity! idealism, objectivity and subjectivity, to materialism and idealism! subjectiVity, all appear to be capable of sliding easily into one another. It is isdifficul1:; to . be difficult to' take avoid the temptation, even if only as a rhetorical device, to take the one of these as a foundation stone for the edifice and explain the obvious others by standing them on top of ,it. There are, however, no obvious priorities in these texts. Each item gains strength and colour fl'om f1"om its association with the others, and all can be given prominence 'withwith on out necessarily having more than a fragile status in dependence on of the rest. Certainly, some of the oppositions are so compounded of enable one another that they almost represent common sense for us,and enable ,does not immediately occur to us us us to construct knowledges which it it-does picto question., It might be thought necessary in considering this pic ,ture of the Celts , particularly' since women slide So easily into the world, to consider it as a picture of economic and political Celtic world! Certainly, at the time, Celts in both Ireland and Scotland oppression. Certainly! were suffering such oppression, and their political status was marginal. 90- 90 phys~cal margina+ityof marginality of the Celtic Ce.ltic world has :a ele;ar~ prac~ical practical The real phys~cal ~ cl~ar~ ',simililrity to' the ~ntern¥ in.sUlated women f'rom rrom the ~ntern¥ enclosUre wh,ich' wl1ich' insulated them: . . Rertatl" remarked ,of the Breton Celts. that they were · soCiety around them:. 'the last to defend their 'religious' lndependence against Rome, and have become the firmest adherent.s of Catholicism;. they were. the last in France Fr~nce to defend def~md their political independence against the king, and have last. royalists I (1947:·256).,' (1947:·256)..' Exactly. Exactly the same given tottle .world the last .could. of. thE~' thE~· Sc~ttish.·(}aels, Sc~ttish.·(}aels, and~ and~ with reservations ,of European ,could. be said of wOIJlen, religio1:lsconservatism. wOIJlen,. in their political and religious conservatism. .. The infolding of wo.men· and' theCel-ts the Celts is .given: . given a vis.ion and reality in the' relation of women· when'we consider that .because . because the division of labour, labour. in further' twis.t wheri':we Celtic speaking areas displayed the; familiar pattern. women were more men. more likelyt·o like:lyt'o t'akepart in likely to ;remain remain monolingual, and. men . English was essentiaL .•. Cohsequentl~ Cohsequentl~ Scottish Gaelic acti vi tieswh:ere .English i.!;' i.!;3) '.now much. restri~tedin'use restri~tedin'use to those; those: very areas in. which Arnolcl gave ·, th~ Celt·. a peculiar competen'ce;the home, ;thechurch, thearts, arid relationships~' to'be la appro· clpsepe:rsonal personal relationships~' Gaelic is considere'd tO'be a very vet'y appro ·clpse .· pr;iate, medium; for .these activities, and its suitabili'tyfor scientific orJmsinessu.se: is, a matter for doubt.; not surprisingly'since surprisingly' since it has orJmsinessu,se, . attenuated by disuse in the areas,· areas.· of vocabulary which it would been .attenuated that.royth and history, myth and require. It is often said of the Celts thatroyth reality, become entwined intheir.lives. 'l-le';can iole';can see that there are sOllle fairly prosaic . reasons reasOns why this·shou..ld be:'So ~ · sOI\le ..•. .•. Clearly~ Clearly~ Arnold'~vi-ork Arnold'~vi-ork is rieith,e~~Siinpi~d~~briptionofa ri.eith.e:r~siinpled~~briptionofa : . or a :hai 'ire apologErt~cs apologErt~cs for ,central ·. reality, ot' nai'ire . centdtl political oppression and ob~erved by Rachel Bromwich, in the 0' Donnel chauvinism: . It has been ob~erved in'sp:i.te'8tconsiderableignoranceof leoture in Oxford in 1964, that in'spite'8tconsiderableignoranceof managE;!d:·tb:anticipate in'many ways the Celtic literature; Arnold managed:'to:anticipate direction that Celtic studies was going to ,take. over the following. stUdies wasgoitIg to.take.over century. Y~ats Y~ats and the others in' the Celtic twilight', twilight'· at the end of the l,as'j:; l,as\i century adopted his picture of the Celt CEnt with little modification. He iaiddown the rules.by which the Celts were dispraised and dis dismisE?ed as· 'veIl as exalted. It took Bernard Shaw to point out that the Anglo-Saxon race thatcQuld believe such a story would need to display all the fanciful credulity n()rmally attributed to the·Celt. the' Celt. credulityn()rmally To'wha.t To·wha.t can we attribute Arnold's foresight,h~s foresight,h~s ability to. to. conjure up a discourse 'of such creativity? We cannot simply appeal discourse'of appeal to a, prescience. " ., Let. us consider the problem of interpretation from from the'priorities the· priorities that Arnold established. He considered his leotUres leotures to be a means of weanirig we ani rig the English middle classa~ay classa~ay from a smug smug and vulgar materialism, from the Philistinism of theAnglo"Saxon~ theAnglo"Saxon~ to to culture., to sweetness end expt'es culture,to and. light~Pethapsthe light~.Pethapsthe most prominent expressiol"). sio1"). of :the Anglo-Saxon'inclinat'ion Anglo-Saxon'inclinat"ion is, is. its aptitude forscierice.To forscierice.To thi~ is opposed the .Celt·, ,Celt', who has sentiment arid ta.ste .. Just as we we could'a;rgue:that was an attempt to supply a niissingdim.ension could' argue:. that Ossian vtasan niissingdim.ension toyhe eighteenth' century intellectual 1vorld,. so we can argue for for Arnold end and his Celt, who appears as a creative attempt to 'repair the the ravages. ravages ..,that, that . the dominant· intellectual self-image was·' inflicting on on .itself •. Henri Martin's phrase", ,itself., phrase,., 'revolt against the ,tyranny tyranny of facts' , which Arnold borrowed, reminds llsoftheoverwhelming pre~eminence of lls.oftheoverwhelmingpre..;.eminence a restrictive notion of scientific method e.nd e_nd an associated idea of w4at what· consti,tuted const~tuted 'fact ',thatvTas, '.that,vTas, and still is, a tyranny in in' the hwnan,sciences.Theverysuccess hwnan·sciences.Theverysuccess of Victorian science; achieved in spite ofthis.self-image, of this ,self-image, confirmed this science s.cience as the Cinly ·suffi ·sufficient be one long lon~ ciE;!nt rationality. Arnold's work was widely held to to.be·one heresy against the obvious· mat eri'ali13nt,l :wherein was obvious' truth and power of ofmateri'alil3nti money, and:well-bein:g~.· His metaphort·o express the defects money.; ,progress, andwell-bein:g~,· a .;.. 91 vTith aver-developed of materialism, the German with over-developed intestines, and the Inrge lungs, the .one pladding, the other Frenchman with large one dull and plodding, mercurial, provides pravides llS maral picture as well as with an us with a clear moral ethnalagical ethnological type-casting that we can still recognise. To redeem fram the scourge scaurge of Philistinism, Arnold could pin his the British from Angla-Saxon faith on the Celtic admixture. In lacating locating .outside outside the Anglo-Saxon the qualities of imagination, taste, whimsy, sensibility, feminity, creativity, beauty, artistry, Arnold was doing no more mare than the Victorian pulllic schaal., school., The 'Germanic' qualities of patience and steadiness steadineSs were just those that the ,educational establishment wished encourage. By locating in the Celt Celt all the qualities that the , ta to encburage. warld view regarded as epiphenomenal, epiphenomehal, Arnold provided pravided a materialist world of facts and means whereby the tyrannical and debilitating duality .of cauld be broken brakendawn, miscegenatian .of ideas could down, by the benign miscegenation of Celtand Celt and Angla-Saxan, producing praducing the Briton Britan .of wi tq Anglo-Saxon, of the future, a ,.,hole man, witq Celt and the German left floundering flaundering in half worlds. warlds. both the Celt ' Arnald's conception canceptian of scienCe and its inadequacies is central Arnold's ta his work. wark. Clea:r;ly,his science is opposed, oppased, as the stronghold stranghald of to rationality, truth, fact, and the world of action, to the arts, fictian, symbolism, the world of ideas. At the same time, scienc~, scienc~, fiction, the same science that is the handmaid of ' industrial capitalism, becomes inhuman, amoral, cold, and llilsentimental. The world in his becames a conjuror's canjurar's box from fram whic!l which twin dualities can be hands becomes '.of getting a matching pair drawn in the dark with the certainty 'of combinatary every time. To attempt even a suggestion of the easy combinatory pawers .of powers of these V'arious symbolic devices would require far more space than I have here. Since this, is a paper in social anthrapalor,J anthropolo~J same of the more obviously anthropological I will attempt to draw some conclusions. ~ It has been suggested, in the great nature/culture debate, that the problem that femininity commonly presents to a male model of society" as a permanent threat to attempts to define clearly a society, explained~ in part, by the lacko:f nature/culture boundary, can be explained, male control aver over female reproductive capacity. To this we can attribute characteristics as we please -- mystery and irrationality suggest themselves fairly readily. The relative internality .of of the reproduccapacities and activities of woman at every stage of the reproduc ta association with tive process lends itself only too readily to certain overtly analytical categories of human physical and mental activity. 'rhe The externality Of of' the area in in which science was thought competent, and the externalit Jr of that with which it dealt, facts and the material world; the qualities with which it was associated, rationality, the intellect; the areas in which it operated, industry, business; all these provide, in a number of different '-laYs, a confirmation .of ~,- woman in her internal 'fays, of their apposite opposite ~.ratianality and instrumental powers she enclosure; in place of rationality 'emotians andintuitive faculties; her st:dCtiy biological ha,s 'emotions noncreativity and its mystery becomes a locus far for all that is non scientific, she is fanciful, open to the influence of wandering cauld hardly have been anyone better qualified than . ideas. There could Yeat's wife to reach the cosmic beyond through intuition, and anthropalagy display iitt in automatic writing. We \.;re draw from recent anthropology underan appasition opposition between nature and culture to stabilise .our our under standing .of of .our our own literature. However the 'nature' .of of the nature/CUlture caupleas anthrapology , nature/culture couple as applied to wcmen in modern anthropology lacation but a moral assessment with three hundred is no simple location years .of of thoughts on rationality packed into it. There can be nodaubt laudly throughaut no doubt that these words have been answering back loudly throughout - 92 their use in anthropology, and that to treat their recent application discoyery is to deny them to PlaJ.e/female symbolism as of the order of discoYery creat i ve history. hi story. their rich and creative Arnold built his vision of the Celt 'tvithout repeated reference to an overt male/female symbolism. Probably his image of of· science and it::} the symbols that he employed, it~ exclusions was the most creative of thes}cmbols anq. one might understand the characteristics assigned to both Celt and'woman as in many ways an artefact of a scientific theory of truth. It ,would have been helpful for the exposition of the qualities of the It.would Ce:j..t if I had been able to demonstrate a physicalbinarism like left Ce:!-t and right to build on. There is, unfortunately,' little evidence that Celts are predominantly left-handed. The undoubted fact that they all li Ii ve on the left-hand side, looking north, of the European C!ontinent ~ontinent might be thought to be an eccident of geography rather than a symbolic statement. Students of binary symbolism will be relieved to note, howeyer, that the left hand is not entirely without a place in the howeYer, imaargument. The qualities, both Celtic and feminine,of fe~nine,of intuition} ima w:ith which left leftgination, and nervous sensibility, are exactly those with. handed people are accredited, as I am familiar from my own primary school experience. It has been-found necessary, in considering 'the Celt' and more generally, the moral discourse that science has gathered round itself, intellecto situate a person or argument by reference to a pervading intellec tualmood. Rationalism, utilitarianism, and romanticism all provide landmarks, bearings to locate a' a person or text. The citation of' of authorities with dates provides us with the illusion and security of in ,proper chronology, the one influ influa linear succession of ideas, in. proper chronology" any such notions about the encing the next. I have tried to dispel any· ideas that I haye been exemining, althol~h I personally find that examining, although constantly risking a relapse into that which I am attempting to deconstruct is rather tiring. When Markale says 'In ',In the Celtic sphere, history is the myth; that is to say, El, a knowledge of history is alre,ady to be found' on a mythical. level, and at this point the thought provoked by the myth takes on an active power because it influences life! (Markale 1975 : 17), we can take this not as a racialist real life' mysticism, which it is, but as an accurate assessment of the creative potentialities of discourse. To attempt, as we are by our training inclined to do, to sort out.fact out ,fact from fiction in studying Arnold's Ce~tic Literatu,re, Literat~re, its sources, and its effects (in literature and Ce.ltic amorig those who considered considered themselves to be Celts) very quickly in~uces It is one of the ironies of the in~uces an intellectual vertigo. Celi:;ic example that the very confusion of fact and fiction of which the Celts are accused provides so ready an example, in its various develQpments, of a history inaccessible to an 'objective' mode of enq'Lliry. We might generalise the dialectic of myth and history of whiQh Markale speaks, and render it both more fertile and more mundane, as 'a certain legitimate ambiguity in the concept of the consciousness of ,history ... This ambiguity is that it is used to mean at once the consciousness obtained in the course of history and determined by history, and the very consciousness of the gaining and (Gadamer' 1975 : xxi). determining' (Gadamer1975 If we move from the Celts to the metaphors from which they are built, the task of enquiry becomes even more daunting. We can have recourse to the easy habit of anchoring history in a few great names of the past, and satisfactorily root the Victorian conception of scientific method in Kant, for example, and Mill. This humble temptation to seize on ostensibly philosophical texts to pin down an otherwise fluid history that shifts every time iitt is disturbed is, - 93 - however, particularly inappropriate in this area. In trying to, display the symbolic "\-Torld vTorld in "\-Thich vThich an idea of science has an impor important part, we are reaching into an ethnography in whichl)hilosophical texts are a small, small~ perhaps insignificant, part. While agreeing with Gadruner investigaGadamer that we, can only 'begin the great task that' faces investiga tors as an aid to philosophical enquiry. Concepts such as 'art', 'history' ; 'the, 'the creative' creative',, '\veltanschauung', '\veltanschauung' , 'experience', 'genius', 'external world', "inferiority', 'expression'., 'style', 'symbol", whiqh V!e use automatically, contain a wealth of history' (1975: 11), we must emphasise the last statement, and point out that this wealth of history is not found in any particularly privileged, pd vileged, concise" or creatiyeform in the books that a library will shelve as philospphical. Gadamer says: If we now examine the importance oI'Kant t s Crttique CrtHque of Judgement for the history history of the huraan sciences, we must say that his giving to aesthetics a transcendental philo philosophical basis had major consequences and con'sti con'ati tuted a 'turning point. It ,-laS' the end of a tradition, but also was·the the beginning of a new development. It limited the idea of taste to an area in which, 'ltThich, asa as' a special principal of judgement, it could claim independent validity -- and by' so doing, limited the concept of knowledge to the the'theoretheore tical and ahd practical use of reason (1975: 38). '. In saying this. he denies the brea.dth. brea,dth. of history, the every. day discourse on whose energy.a m\lst draw. Thechrono The'chronoenergy a single text, however original, m~st logy is in a sense irrelevant, but but.the the 1 romaptic' ,the beginnings of the'romaptic' movement are los,t .Ossian was pUblished published lost in the early eighteenth century. ,Ossian in the 1760s, rod Hhat Gadamer rold Kant '. s Critique of Judgement in 178'7. \-That calls, with ready symbolism, the 'cold rationalism rationalism. of the enlightenment' (1975 : 57) was thoughtful longbefo~e long before Kant was freezing the blood of the though~ful gave it his attention. Within social anthropclogy,where we cherish a certain pride in a more than usually acute sensitivity to the meaning of the words we employ, the depth and coherence'of the metaphors in which 'science' is involved simply asks asks that we exercise this sensitivity over a very large area. This request might sound like that valedictory generosity so common co~on among B~ong social scientists, the allocation of an impossible task to other researchers. It is certainly that, but also a request that we take seriously a sensitivity to the rich symbolic history that many of our words of self.;..understandingnave. w'hen we consider self.;..understandinghave. "W'hen that the institutiomliso'tionaf'social institutiomliso.tiol1af'social anthropology took place at a period when the subject was in the grip of a reductive materialism, materialism~ and besotted by a notion ofscient'ific ofscient"ific method that milSht, but for the Darwinian counter-reformation,' have found its way into the history be1ore"we should not be surprised that the emergence books some time before,.we from this twilight is accompanied by an appeal for the broadening of intellectual horizons, advocated by Malcolm Crick as by Matth~w Matth~w Arnold, for largely similar reasons. Nor should we think it ~n . accident of the 1970s that a criticism i.pf i.pf formal analysis should appear like an appeal for a humanitarian and moral approach to the study of man. To return to where 've we started started~~ let us look again at the shift from function to meaning. Pocock says 'One had hoped that the mood of introspection and concern with epistemology which set in during the 1960s would result in a more educated, more philosophically sensitive anthropology ivhich spec ialiwhich could both contain the emerging speciali -sations and justify the emergence of the th8 subject in the undergraduate curriculum as an education for life. v He says that our concern is with 'problems which are ultimately moral ones', that 'Dr. Crick's - 94 94prime quarrel is with functionaliSm because it left out this most hQ~nity, and so disfigured the nature basic human characteristic of hQ~nity, (Pococll: 1977 : 596). vle vIe are hoping to find, that it claimed to study' (Pocock through a mood of introspection, a. sensitive and moral' education for life, a re-establishinent'ofan undisfigured natural humanity. Certainly, we might be listening to the'Matthew .l\.rno1d Arnold of Culture and Anarchy. One feature of the argument towards semantic anthropology 'is the ease with which any attempt to undermine the dualities that'logicaFpositivism offered encourages an untimely subsidence intc into the srone saine old entrenchment. The temptation to subjectivism, subjectivism~ idealism, hUmanism,' is difficult to avoid in ordinary lahg~age~' 1ahg1.l.age~' I have tried to give sonie some illustration of the commonly commonly unacknowledged symbolic baggage that the most' apparently tbgive innocent of these dualities carry around, that helps perhaps to 'give them a strength.and substance not immediately obvious. When Crick says that 'most of what is' important to us is spoken about in d:i.s d:i.scourse which mixes inextricably the analytical oppositions which logical positivism offered' offered', (i976 : 159), he is quite right . It remains the case, however~ however~ that the, analytical oppositions of logical positivism are themselves only one rescencion of a symbolism of enormous scope on unpleas;;'nt flavour with which 'function' which w~ continually drm-,. The unpleas~nt invades our vocabulary is not difficUlt diffic1.l1t to account for. To be merely functional was never high praise, and the mere functioIlary functionary never an enviable person. Bodily functions and civic functions are the most m~aning is equally material of mundanities. The appeal of the shift to m~aning clear. What more could we ask thah that our work should become meaning meaningful? Why ever cUd we establishou.r establish our field asa science at all, with such an ugly'hame? ugly'name? I am led to believe'that we owe our thirty years of tediuin to the fact that Radcliffe-Bro'mwas Radcliffe-Bro'IDwas an Anglo-Saxon, functionalist tedium vlhen Pocock says of Crick' that his 'passion and probably right handed. vfuen by an insistence on meticulously careful exposition' Cis] disciplined by that'gene(my emphasis) we'cansee that Crick represents the first of that'gene Angloration of which Matthew Arnold dreamed, where the Celt and'the Anglo Saxon join to shed their;defects and become the complete nL"Ln. REFERENCES' Arnold, Mat thew .1891. Celtic Literature. London : Smith, Elder & Co. Crick,Malcolm. ~xplorations in Language and Meaning. London : Crick, Malcolm. 1976. ~xplorations Malaby Press. ,', Gadruner, Hans Georg. 1975. Truth and Method. (Trans. Garret Barden and Gadamer, John, Cumming). Cumming).' London: Sheed and Ward. vlard. ' John Markale~ Jean. 1975. Women of ' the Celts (Trans. A. Mygind, C. Hauc,h Markale, , and P. Henry). London: Gordon Cremonesi. Pocock, David. 1977. Review of~plorations of~plorations in Language and Meaning by Malcolm Crick. Times Literary Supplement, May 13th 1977. Reeollections of My Yout.J.. (Trans. C.B. Pitman). Renan, Joseph Ernest. 1883. Recollections Chapmanand Hall.• London: Chapman and Hall .-:.,. .': . 194 .-:... ' 19477 -61~. Oeuvres Compl~tes Compl~tes (Tome II). CalmannLevy Eds. Paris. Ma.1colm Chapman Malcolm